Lisa Marie’s Week In Review: 6/5/23 — 6/11/23


I watched a lot of movies this week because not only am I getting a head start on my reviews for this year’s October Horrorthon but also because I discovered that there’s like 40 Amityville film on Tubi alone.  That’s going to keep me busy for a while!

This upcoming week, I look forward to getting back to the final season of Mrs. Maisel and finishing up A Small Light.  There’s a lot that I need to watch so wish me luck (and time)!

Here’s what I watched, read, and listened to this week!

Films I Watched:

  1. Amityville Cop (2021)
  2. Amityville Death House (2015)
  3. Breakfast at Tiffany’s (1961)
  4. Captain America (1990)
  5. Catching Faith (2015)
  6. Catching Faith 2: The Homecoming (2019)
  7. Come Next Spring (1956)
  8. Cutback (2011)
  9. Dawn: Portrait of a Teenage Runaway (1976)
  10. Dead Again (1991)
  11. Graduation Day (1981)
  12. Longtime Companion (1990)
  13. The Man Who Wanted to Live Forever (1970)
  14. Patmos (1985)
  15. The Prodigal (1983)
  16. Project: Kill (1976)
  17. Rabid (1977)
  18. Roman Holiday (1953)
  19. Sabrina (1954)
  20. Seventy Times Seven (2012)
  21. Stand Strong (2011)
  22. The 3 (2019)
  23. To Hell and Back (2015)
  24. Under The Influence (1986)
  25. The War Within (2013)
  26. Worth: The Testimony of Johnny St. James (2012)

Television Shows I Watched:

  1. All You Need Is Love
  2. Beavis and Butt-Head
  3. Fantasy Island
  4. Forgive or Forget
  5. Happy Hour
  6. The Master
  7. The Maury Povich Story
  8. Sally Jessy Raphael
  9. The Steve Wilkos Show
  10. Welcome Back, Kotter

Books I Read:

  1. High Concept: Don Simpson and the Hollywood Culture of Excess (1998) by Charles Fleming

Music To Which I Listened:

  1. 2Ton
  2. Above & Beyond
  3. Annie Hardy
  4. The Beatles
  5. Beck
  6. Bloc Party
  7. Bob Dylan
  8. The Chemical Brothers
  9. Dua Lipa
  10. Elle King
  11. Gwen Stefani
  12. Intimatchine
  13. Jake Bugg
  14. Muse
  15. No Doubt
  16. Public Service Broadcasting
  17. Saint Motel
  18. Sleigh Bells
  19. Space
  20. Swedish House Mafia

Live Tweets:

  1. Project Kill
  2. Dead Again
  3. Captain America
  4. Rabid

News From Last Week:

  1. Failed Philosopher And Murderous Weirdo Ted Kacynski Commits Suicide
  2. Angry Comedian Pat Cooper Dies At 93
  3. Actress Noreen Nash Dies at 99
  4. Comic Book Artist Ian McGinty Dies At 38

Links From Last Week:

  1. “The Stewardess Is Flying The Plane!” Celebrating 70’s Disaster Films And Action Classics From Cinema’s Greatest Decade!
  2. Tater’s Week in Review 6/10/23

Links From The Site:

  1. I shared music videos from Annie Hardy, 2Ton, Muse, No Doubt, Beck, and Intimatchine!
  2. I reviewed Hang Time, Fantasy Island, The Love Boat, City Guys, The Master, and Welcome Back Kotter!
  3. I reviewed Project Kill, Amityville Cop, Amityville Death House, In Search of America, and Worth!
  4. I shared my week in television!
  5. Erin shared images of D-Day!
  6. Erin shared Crime Detective, Wink, Western Novels, Top and Bottom, Sea Adventures, True Adventure, and Sex Jungle!
  7. Jeff reviewed Ride Him, Cowboy!
  8. Jeff shared a music video from Lisa Loeb!

More From Us:

  1. At my music site, I shared songs from Annie Hardy, Sleigh Bells, Bloc Party, Space, Regina Spektor, The Beatles, and Muse!
  2. At Pop Politics, Jeff wrote about the governor of New Hampshire!
  3. At Days Without Incident, Leonard shared music from The Prodigy!
  4. At her photography site, Erin shared Branch Network, Places To Be Worms To Eat, Humpty Dumpty Before The Great Fall, Peace on Earth, Abandoned Theater, Shoes On A Wire, and Who Wants To Play?

Want to see what I did last week?  Click here!

Retro Television Reviews: In Search of America (by Paul Bogart)


Welcome to Retro Television Reviews, a feature where we review some of our favorite and least favorite shows of the past!  On Sundays, I will be reviewing the made-for-television movies that used to be a primetime mainstay.  Today’s film is 1971’s In Search of America!  It  can be viewed on YouTube!

College student Mike Olson (young Jeff Bridges) returns home and informs his mother (Vera Miles) and his father (Carl Betz) and his annoyingly quirky grandmother (Ruth McDevitt) that he’s dropped out of college.  He apologizes for wasting all the money that they spent on tuition but hey, maybe he can make it up to them by taking them on a journey as he drives across America in an old bus.

Uhmmm….

Now, let me just repeat this so that there is no confusion.  This absolutely schmuck took his parents’ money, wasted it, dropped out of college, and now he expects everyone to travel with him across America because he’s decided that he’s a part of the counterculture.

And, instead of telling him to go to Hell and get a job, his family agrees.

Oh sure, Mom is a little bit hesitant about Mike’s idea.  But Dad is really enthusiastic.  He understands the kids and he wants a chance to relive his own youth, before he got tied down with things like paying bills and being a responsible human being.  And, of course, if the Hippies were famous for anything, it was their love of upper class, middle-aged people.  Just ask the LaBiancas.

And, of course, grandma is totally excited about it because she’s an old person in a made-for-TV movie.

So, they all board the bus and Mike takes them to a music festival so that they can meet some of his friends.  For instance, there’s Nick (Sal Mineo), a drop-out who says that he’s more burned out than turned on.  There’s Annie (Tyne Daly), who is going to need someone to help deliver her baby.  There’s Bodhi (Glynn Turman), who is some sort of doctor.  He and grandma bond of their shared quirkiness.  And then there’s Kathy (Renne Jarrett), who is at the music festival despite the fact that she’s really sick and on the verge of dying. When Kathy’s parents (Howard Duff and Kim Hunter) show up looking for her, Mike has to decide whether to save her life or respect her wish to do her own thing.

This was obviously meant to be a pilot for a show where the family would travel around the country and I guess get involved in different adventures each week.  The main problem is that, while Jeff Bridges seems to be a bit of a hippie in real life, he’s not particularly convincing in this film.  He’s way too clean-cut and his family’s decision to follow him across the country never makes the least bit of sense.  As for the hippies themselves, they come across as being so shallow that I found myself wanting to donate money to the Nixon campaign.

Music Video of the Day: Let’s Forget About It by Lisa Loeb (1997, directed by Chris Applebaum)


This song, which appeared on Lisa Loeb’s fourth album, Firecracker, features Loeb asking her significant other to just move on from whatever they are fighting about.  She sings that there is no use in crying over the little things in life but, at the end, she says that she’ll stop crying if her partner stops lying, suggesting that their fight may not have been as minor as it seemed.

This video features Lisa Loeb trashing a hotel room and was directed by Chris Applebaum, who has done videos for everyone.  If you were a successful musician or rock artist back in the day, Chris Applebaum did at least one video for you.

This song peaked at #38 in the U.S.  It did somewhat better in Canada, reaching the 21st position in the charts.

Enjoy!